I am in a landscape exhibition up at Columbia University right now.
The opening is tonight, Friday, November 9 from 5–9 pm. The show includes about 25 of my prints, large and small, etchings and monotypes. Please come if you can.

I recently illustrated 1984 for Easton Press. What an honor! I have always dreamed of illustrating this novel, and Easton Press is the book publishing company that produces the finest and most beautiful books ever! I really put my heart and soul into this job. I worked with Michael Hendricks on this, and he was wonderful to work with. Thanks Michael!

The two etchings on the left are mine, in an exhibition of prints at The Old Printshop Gallery on Lexington Avenue and 30th Street in Manhattan. Next to my prints are prints by Diego Riviera, and Rafael Soyer. That’s a delicious sandwich to be in the middle of, no? I am honored!

I am conducting an intensive two-day workshop at Manhattan Graphic Center this weekend. Its a two day monoprint/monotype seminar. I am excited to do this as I usually tremendously enjoy doing these kind of things.

This workshop is ideal for artists who love to draw and paint directly
and spontaneously. Monoprints incorporate draftsmanship and direct
painting with printmaking. This workshop approaches monoprinting in a
unique way; draw and paint in color with rollers, brushes, palette
knives and explore how to use found materials creating textures that
enhance the atmosphere and mood of a picture. We will focus on pulling
both light out of a dark background as well as working dark on light.
Students who love to draw find freedom using these techniques, their
color sense is expanded and their drawing abilities can evolve to a
higher level. All levels of experience welcome.

The works will be reproduced in the Illustrators Annual #60, next year. The piece is a monotype which is printed in a book, Drawing for Everyone, that I wrote and illustrated and is published by Peter Pauper Press. The boxer piece is in a section on creating sequential images, in a chapter on drawing movement and motion.

It’s an honor for me to be part of this prestigious exhibition and publication.

My Website

My Books

Anyone can draw. Award-winning artist Bruce Waldman has spent the last 30 years teaching people at all levels simple methods for drawing nearly anything imaginable, adapting and simplifying techniques favored by artists since the Renaissance.

"Learn all about it in this nifty new pocket guide to man's best fiends: VAMPIRES, WEREWOLVES, ZOMBIES: Compendium Monstrum, collected from the papers of 19th-century monstrologists."

"The Art of War for Zombies is a hilarious mash-up of the ancient Sun-Tzu classic, The Art of War, with Zombies, er, components."